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Lift and cut: Anti-host autophagy mechanism of Legionella pneumophila.

Supansa PantoomAimin YangYao-Wen Wu
Published in: Autophagy (2017)
RavZ, an effector protein of pathogenic Legionella pneumophila, inhibits host macroautophagy/autophagy by deconjugation of lipidated LC3 proteins from phosphatidylethanolamine (PE) on the autophagosome membrane. The mechanism for how RavZ specifically recognizes and deconjugates the lipidated LC3s is not clear. To understand the structure-function relationship of LC3-deconjugation by RavZ, we prepared semisynthetic LC3 proteins modified with different fragments of PE or 1-hexadecanol (C16). We find that RavZ activity is strictly dependent on the conjugated PE structure and RavZ extracts LC3-PE from the membrane before deconjugation. Structural and biophysical analysis of RavZ-LC3 interactions suggest that RavZ initially recognizes LC3-PE on the membrane via its N-terminal LC3-interacting region (LIR) motif. RavZ specifically targets to autophagosome membranes by interaction with phosphatidylinositol 3-phosphate (PtdIns3P) via its C-terminal domain and association with membranes via the hydrophobic α3 helix. The α3 helix is involved in extraction of the PE moiety and docking of the fatty acid chains into the lipid-binding site of RavZ, which is related in structure to that of the phospholipid transfer protein Sec14. The LIR interaction and lipid binding facilitate subsequent proteolytic cleavage of LC3-PE. The findings reveal a novel mode of host-pathogen interaction.
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